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Bill Hardgrave (presenter) John Aloysius Sandeep Goyal Information Systems Department University of Arkansas. RFID-Enabled Visibility and Inventory Record Inaccuracy: Experiments in the Field . Research Questions. Will RFID technology improve inventory record accuracy? (Study 1)
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Bill Hardgrave (presenter) John Aloysius Sandeep Goyal Information Systems Department University of Arkansas RFID-Enabled Visibility and Inventory Record Inaccuracy: Experiments in the Field
Research Questions • Will RFID technology improve inventory record accuracy? (Study 1) • Can RFID technology ameliorate the effects of known causal predictors of inventory record inaccuracy? (Study 1 / Study 2) • What are the characteristics of product categories for which RFID technology is effective in reducing inventory record inaccuracy? (Study 2)
Study 1 • All products in air freshener category tagged at case level • Interrupted Time-series design • Data collection: 23 weeks • 13 stores: 8 test stores, 5 control stores • Mixture of Supercenter and Neighborhood Markets • Daily physical counts • 10 weeks to determine baseline • Same time, same path each day
Notes p<.05, **p< .01, ***p<.001 Velocity = Number of units sold per day; Item Cost Cost of an item in cents; Sales Volume = Item Cost X Velocity; Variety = Number of unique SKUS carried in a store; PRE: Periods numbered consecutively for 40 day window around the adjustment; POST: Periods numbered O to 20 days before the adjustment, numbered consecutively after; TRANS: Numbered 0 before the adjustment, numbered 1 after Notes p<.05, **p< .01, ***p<.001 Velocity = Number of units sold per day; Item Cost Cost of an item in cents; Sales Volume = Item Cost X Velocity; Variety = Number of unique SKUS carried in a store; PRE: Periods numbered consecutively for 40 day window around the adjustment; POST: Periods numbered O to 20 days before the adjustment, numbered consecutively after; TRANS: Numbered 0 before the adjustment, numbered 1 after Study 1 Results: Linear Mixed Effects(Discontinuous growth model for test stores) Notes p<.05, **p< .01, ***p<.001 Velocity = Number of units sold per day; Item Cost: Cost of an item in cents; Sales Volume = Item Cost X Velocity; Variety = Number of unique SKUS carried in a store; PRE: Periods numbered consecutively for 40 day window around the adjustment; POST: Periods numbered O to 20 days before the adjustment, numbered consecutively after; TRANS: Numbered 0 before the adjustment, numbered 1 after
Study 1 Results: Discontinuous growth model(Interrupted time series for test stores)
Study 1 Results: Linear Mixed Model for Test versus Control stores (post period) Notes: ***p<.001, **p<.01 Sales volume = Number of units sold per day; Item Cost = Cost of an item in cents; Dollar Sales = Item Cost X Velocity; Variety = Number of unique SKUs carried in a store; Test: Dummy variable coded I for test stores and 0 for control stores; Period: Day 1 starting when RFID auto-adjust was made available in test store.
Study 1: Discussion • PI accuracy improved 23% • Results were essentially what we expected • Insight from DeHoratius and Raman (2008) variables • Raises the question: what about other categories?
Study 2 • Untreated Control Group design with pretest and post-test • Matched Sample • 62 stores: 31 test stores, 31 control stores • Mixture of Supercenter and Neighborhood Markets • Spread across the United States • Looked at both understated PI and overstated PI • Control stores: RFID-enabled, business as usual • Test stores: business as usual, PLUS used RFID reads (from inbound door, sales floor door, box crusher) to determine count of items in backroom • Auto-PI: adjustment made by system • For example: if PI = 0, but RFID indicates case (=12) in backroom, then PI adjusted PI: Perpetual Inventory
Study 2 (contd.) • Five general merchandise categories • Floorcare • e.g., Powerforce vacuum, tough stain pretreat, Woolite gallon • Air freshener • e.g., Glade plugin, Febreeze paradise, Glade oil • Formula • e.g., Pediasure chocolate, Nutripal vanilla • Ready to assemble furniture • e.g., computer cart, pedestal desk, executive chair • Quick cleaners • e.g., wood floor cleaner, Readymop, Swiffer floor sweeper PI: Perpetual Inventory
Study 2 (contd.) • Data collection • Two waves (Pre and Post implementation), two months apart • Same time, same path each wave • Stock physical counts • conducted over 5 days in each wave by an independent company • Dependent variable: PI Absolute = |PI – Actual| • Looked at both understated and overstated PI RFID Implementation Pre-implementation Post-implementation 5 days 5 days 2 Months
Study 2 (contd.) • Data collection (contd.): Measures • Item cost • Cost of the item to the retailer • Sales volume • Quantity of item sold for two month preceding measurement • Dollar sales • Dollar amount of items sold for two month preceding measurement • Density • Total number of units in a category divided by linear feet of shelf space for that category • Variety • Total number of unique SKUs in a category PI: Perpetual Inventory
Study 2 Results: Ameliorating effects of RFID (Pre-test/Post-test) PI~TREAT + COST + SALESVOL + DOLLARSA + DENSITY + CATVAR + TREAT_XXX *** p < .01, ** p < .05, * p < .10
Study 2 Results:Effect size for Treatment, Linear Mixed Model PI = β0 + β1*Treatment *** p < .01, ** p < .05, * p < .10 Significance of difference assessed by interaction term of treatment (pre-post) and group (test-control)
Study 2 Results:Characterization of Categories *** p < .01, ** p < .05, * p < .10
Contributions • RFID technology with case-pack tagging demonstrated to improve inventory inaccuracy by 16% to 81% depending on category characteristics • Evidence that RFID technology is effective in ameliorating the effects on inventory inaccuracy of item cost, sales volume, dollar sales, density, and variety PI: Perpetual Inventory
Contributions (contd.) • RFID technology is more effective in reducing PI inaccuracy in product categories which have: • higher sales volume, • lower item cost, • higher dollar sales, • greater SKU variety, • greater inventory density
Future Research Directions • What is the economic impact of improving inventory accuracy (with RFID)? • Imagine inventory accuracy with item-level tagging …
Bill Hardgrave bhardgrave@walton.uark.edu 479.575.6099 John Aloysius jaloysius@walton.uark.edu 479.575.3003 Sandeep Goyal sgoyal@walton.uark.edu 479.575.6961 For copies of white papers, visit http://itri.uark.edu/research Keyword: RFID
Business Problem and Motivation • Perpetual inventory (PI) record inaccuracy affects forecasting, ordering, replenishment • PI is inaccurate on 65% of items (Raman et al. 2001) • At any given time the retailer in this study manages about $32 billion in inventory
Scientific Motivation • Firms are skeptical about implementing new technologies based on pure faith, but need value assessments, tests, or experiments (Dutta, Lee, and Whang 2007) • Such empirical-based research requires “a well-designed sample, with appropriate controls and rigorous statistical analysis”
Research Model: Making the Business Case for RFID Technology Research Gap RFID Technology Inventory Visibility Inventory Record Inaccuracy Costs/ Profitability Delen et al. 2007
Research Gap • There is little empirical research in the field that demonstrates and quantifies the ability of RFID technology to improve inventory inaccuracy • There is no empirical research that characterizes product categories for which RFID technology may be effective in reducing inventory record inaccuracy
Key Terms • Inventory visibility • Retailer’s ability to determine the location of a unit of inventory at a given point in time by tracking movements in the supply chain • Inventory record inaccuracy • Absolute difference between physical inventory and the information system inventory at any given time (Fleisch and Tellkamp 2005) • RFID-enabled auto-adjustment • A system that leverages RFID technology to correct for the absolute difference between physical inventory and the inventory management system inventory at any given time
How does inventory inaccuracy occur? PI: Perpetual Inventory Source: Delen et al. (2007)
Research Gap • There is evidence that RFID technology improves inventory visibility • Researchers assume that improved inventory visibility will result in improved inventory record inaccuracy and consequently impact costs and profitability • The current research experimentally manipulates inventory visibility in field conditions (by means of an RFID enabled auto-adjustment system) in order to assess the effect on inventory record inaccuracy
Study 1 (contd.) • Looked at understated PI only • i.e., where PI < actual • Treatment: • Control stores: RFID-enabled, business as usual • Test stores: business as usual, PLUS used RFID reads (from inbound door, sales floor door, box crusher) to determine count of items in backroom • Auto-PI: adjustment made by system • For example: if PI = 0, but RFID indicates case (=12) in backroom, then PI adjusted – NO HUMAN INTERVENTION
Box Crusher Reader Receiving Door Readers Backroom Readers Backroom Storage Sales Floor Door Readers Sales Floor Read points - Generic Store
Study 1: Statistical Analyses • Two comparisons: • Discontinuous growth model (Pre-test/Post-test) • PI = b0 + b1*PRE + b2*POST + b3*TRANS • Linear mixed effects model (Test/Control) • Random effect: Items grouped within stores • Statistical software: R • Hardware: Mainframe
Study 1 Results: Descriptive statistics (all stores, pooled across pre-test/post-test periods) Notes: ***p<.001, **p<.01
Study 2: Statistical Analyses • Comparisons: • Linear mixed effects model (Pre-test/Post-test) • Random effect: Items grouped within stores • Statistical software: R • Hardware: Mainframe